Negotiations on Tunisia political crisis fail

Share via e-mail

Labor leader Houcine Abassi said the government was stalling in talks.

By Bouazza Ben BouazzaAssociated Press
September 22, 2013

TUNIS, Tunisia — The Tunisian political crisis prompted by the assassination of a leading opposition figure deepened on Saturday after the main labor union said talks with the Islamist-led government had failed, casting doubt on the country’s ability to emerge from more than two years of turmoil.

Houcine Abassi, leader of the UGTT labor union representing 500,000 workers, said the government was stalling in response to demands that it resign and make way for an interim, nonpartisan replacement. The union, opposition lawyers, and human rights advocates say the government’s inability to ensure security led to the killings of two opposition figures in July and February.

The death of Mohammed Brahmi, who was gunned down in front of his family on July 25, plunged Tunisia into its current crisis, as dozens of opposition lawmakers quit, freezing efforts to write a new constitution. Street protests and political paralysis have crippled the country.

Tunisia’s protesters, inspired by the self-immolation of a fruit seller, overthrew their decades-old authoritarian government in January 2011. Those protests spread through the Arab world, including to Egypt, Syria, and neighboring Libya.

Tunisia has so far fared better than those countries, setting an example for political cooperation when a coalition was formed between the Islamist Ennahda Party and two secular parties. But the troubled coalition government has failed to restore the economy or control religious extremists, which it blames for the two assassinations of opposition figures killed by the same gun. The killers remain at large.

The government’s immediate task — writing a constitution and paving the way for new elections — was newly called into question by Saturday’s announcement.

Abassi said the door was open to renewed negotiations, but the prospect seemed unlikely given his accusations of government ‘‘doublespeak and manipulation.’’

The opposition has accused Ennahda of being overly tolerant of a rising radical Islamist trend that has shown violent tendencies in its efforts to instill greater piety. Before the 2011 fall of Tunisia’s longtime dictator, the country had been known as one of the most secular countries in the Arab world.